According to Dr Dodds' studies, a vaccination can last for years....
A couple of other scientists say one vaccination can last for a life time for cats but right now, there isn't any concrete proof.
'A recently published survey [20] identified a 5-fold increase in the occurrence of vaccine-associated sarcoma in cats receiving adjuvanted vaccine compared to cats that only received non-adjuvanted vaccine during the same 5-year periodb. Administering only non-adjuvanted vaccines to cats is not likely to completely eliminate the risk of injection-site sarcoma. However, the reduction in tumor risk associated with administering adjuvant-free vaccine to cats may ultimately prove to be significant. Any veterinarian who administers vaccines to cats has a responsibility to at least consider the option to avoid using adjuvanted vaccines in cats.'
Adjuvant. Of particular concern is the role that adjuvant, such as aluminum hydroxide, a common component of killed vaccines used in humans and animals, has in causing the inflammatory response that, in some cats, culminates in metaplasia of fibrocytes and tumor formation. An adjuvant is, quite simply, a chemical added to killed viral and bacterial vaccines as a means of enhancingd the immune response to a relatively weak immunizing antigen...i.e., the killed virus or bacteria. Currently, companion animal vaccine labels do not specify whether the vaccine is adjuvanted or not. Note: Vaccines that do NOT contain adjuvant include: modified-live virus vaccines, avirulent-live bacterial vaccines [e.g., intranasal administration], and recombinant vaccines.
~~ Richard B. Ford, DVM, MS, DACVIM, DACVPM (Hon)
Professor of Medicine, NCSU College of Veterinary Medicine
http://www.vin.com/proceedings/Proceedings.plx?CID=WSAVA2005&PID=10911&Category=1554&O=GenericA more detailed study and recommendation by the American Association of Feline Practitioners can be found here:
http://www.aafponline.org/resources/guidelines/2006_Vaccination_Guidelines_JAVMA.pdfNobivac's tricat is modified. But I would not recommend giving a combined vaccination. According to Dr Jean Dodds's protocol, one vaccination for one disease at any time and wait a month to give another.
If your cat is older than 10, chances are, they already have the antibodies against other diseases and infection eg cat flu etc. To be really safe, she can request an antibody test for those infection and see if any vaccination is needed.
If the cat had already had a lump in the vaccination site, I would not vaccine the cat again -- the recurring rate of vaccination associated sarcoma is nearly 100%.
You can also joined
http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/Feline_VAS_Support/ and tell the owner Gigi I send you there (Andrew, her megacolon moderator)-- they are in contact with leading scientists, oncologists, feline specialists etc and they have most up to date information.
Andrew